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July 11 - August 21, 2005

Southern Masters of Printmaking

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August Cook
(1897 - 1987)

Return of the Natives
Woodcut, 6” x 10”

 

August Cook
(1897 - 1987)

The Abandoned School
Woodcut, 6” x 10”

August Cook was Chair of the Art Department at Converse College in Spartanburg for forty-two years, where he established the first Art Major program in South Carolina. Cook and his wife Irma, an equally accomplished artist, were both Cresson Award Winners at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts.


Howard Cook
(1901 - 1980)

Cumberland Girl
1937, lithograph, 17 7/8” x 12 3/4”

Altapass, North Carolina


Howard Cook
(1901 - 1980)

Southern Pioneers
c. 1936, aquatint, softground and
etching, 12 13/16” x 10 7/8”


Howard Cook
(1901 - 1980)

Southern Mountaineer
1936, aquatint with softground,
11 5/16” x 9”


James Fowler Cooper
(1907 - 1968)

Prince George Winyah #1
c. 1935, etching, 8 1/4” x 7”23.


James Fowler Cooper
(1907 - 1968)

Old Lachicotte Place
c. 1935, etching, 6” x 8”

This house is one of the original homes on Pawleys Island, South Carolina.


James Fowler Cooper
(1907 - 1968)

The Church of the Holy Cross
c. 1935, etching, 8” x 9 1/2”

Church of the Holy Cross is the Episcopal church in Stateburg, South Carolina in Sumter County.


James Fowler Cooper
(1907 - 1968)

Saturday Night
c. 1935, etching, 5 1/2” x 8”

A street corner in Kingstree, South
Carolina where James Fowler Cooper lived


James Fowler Cooper
(1907 - 1968)

The Middleton Place
Etching, 8” x 10 1/4”


Virginia Fouche
(1929 - 2004)

Charleston Market– Saturday Morning
Lithograph, 18 1/2” x 25”


Reuben Gambrell
(b. 1917)

Greenville, South Carolina’s County Fair
1952, etching, 7 1/4” x 8 3/4”


Crawford Gillis
(1914 - 2000)

Outside Shops
1934, drypoint, 4” x 5 1/4”


 

Anne Goldthwaite
(1869 - 1944)

Cotton Wagons in Court Square
1920, etching, 5 7/8” x 6 7/8”